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Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod

Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod
Industry Firearms
Predecessor Česká zbrojovka
Founded 1919 (1919) (Jihočeská zbrojovka)
1936 (1936) (Uherský Brod factory)
Founder Karel Bubla
Alois Tomiska
Headquarters Uherský Brod, Moravia, Czech Republic
Area served
Worldwide
Products
Number of employees
1800
Subsidiaries
Website

www.czub.cz(Czech)

www.cz-usa.com(USA)

www.czub.cz(Czech)

Česká zbrojovka a.s. Uherský Brod (ČZUB) (English: Czech Arms Factory) is a Czech firearms manufacturer.

In 1918, several former members of the Austro-Hungarian military service assumed a controlling interest in the Austro-Hungarian armament shop in Brno, Czechoslovakia, renaming it Státní zbrojovka a strojírna v Brno (State Armament and Engineering Works of Brno). Approximately a year later, the name was changed to Českáslovenská Zbrojovka (Czechoslovak State Armament Works). The former provinces of Bohemia and Moravia had long been firearms manufacturing centers within their regions. Prior to 1924, this firm was involved mainly with Mauser Model 98 type rifles (both assembly and mfg.). Around 1923, pistol manufacture was transferred from Brno to Ceská Zbrojovka, located in Strakonice, Czechoslovakia.

Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod or ČZUB was first established on 27 June 1936 as a branch of the Česká zbrojovka Strakonice armament firm in the small Moravian town of Uherský Brod in Czechoslovakia, now in the Czech Republic. The decision was made in the light of the rising power of German Nazi expansionism, especially after the Hitler's unopposed Remilitarization of the Rhineland with the aim of moving the manufacturing of firearms further from German border. The factory was built within 16 weeks of the initial decision.

After World War II all the firearms manufacturers were managed by a single central agency which required that "Any firearm exported will bear the BRNO markings"; this is why many ČZUB firearms, even those made in Uherský Brod or Strakonice, bear BRNO markings.

Firearms principally designed by the famed Czech firearms engineers Frantisek and Josef Koucký bear the ZKK, ZKM, ZKP, or ZKR acronyms:

During 1964-1966, the Czech government transferred the production of long guns from Zbrojovka Brno to Ceská Zbrojovka Uhersky Brod (ČZUB). Throughout the Cold War ČZUB manufactured a wide variety of military small arms including the Sa vz. 58 assault rifle, the Škorpion vz. 61 submachine gun, various .22 caliber training and target rifles and the very successful CZ 75 family of pistols. While many firearm designs originated in Brno, Zbrojovka Brno was not the manufacturer. Because of this, the long guns manufactured in the mid-1960s, including the ZKK 600 and ZKK 602 series and the ZKM rimfires, were actually manufactured by CZ Uhersky Brod (ČZUB). Because of the Czech government's decision to merge manufacture within both companies, the Brno trademark was also used by Ceská Zbrojovka Uhersky Brod. By the early 1980s, firearms production at Zbrojovka Brno accounted for less than 3% of its total capacity, as production was shifted to the manufacture of typewriters, diesel motors, and automatic machine tools.


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